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Lily Cathcart wedding dress
Worn by Lily on her wedding day on September 10, 1910, the beautiful dress was filled with weights, designed to give it a fashionable “scroop” or rustling noise, but also making it fragile and requiring delicate handling by the city’s textile experts over the past five-and-a-half decades.
Remarkably, it still even has several tiny pieces of confetti from the wedding day embedded in its delicate embroidery.
A classic example of the elegant style of the time, the dress is made of cream silk satin with a silk chiffon pleated overlay. Its high stand collar is trimmed with lace, extremely fashionable for the period, and the front of the dress is heavily decorated with silver beads.
Lily Cathcart wedding dress
The descendants of Leeds schoolmistress Lily Cathcart travelled to the Leeds Discovery Centre this week, where they viewed their precious family heirloom, donated to the museum by Lily’s daughters Bessie, Jean and Isabel in the early 1970s.
L-R is Lily’s great, great grandson Alexander Bromley, Christina Bromley, Jennifer Slater and Emmeline Bromley, whose namesake Emmeline Pankhurst was one of the leading lights of the Suffrage movement.
Kirkgate Market 2
A computer-generated image showing Leeds City Council's vision for the market's blockshops area.
Kirkgate Market 1
Councillor Jonathan Pryor, Leeds City Council’s deputy leader and executive member for economy, transport and sustainable development, pictured in October last year with some of the refurbished blockshop units at Leeds Kirkgate Market.
Gascoigne 1
Councillor Jess Lennox, Councillor James Lewis and Tom Riordan with other attendees at the Gascoigne House opening event.
Gascoigne 4
An aerial image (from November 2023) of Gascoigne House with some of the family homes and accessible bungalows that form part of the wider redevelopment of the site.
Gascoigne 2
Councillor James Lewis and Councillor Jess Lennox help Rosemary and Steven Brown with the cutting of a celebratory cake at the Gascoigne House opening event.
Pudsey Park kiosk
Serving up hot and cold drinks, ice cream, cakes, sandwiches, pastries and confectionary, the kiosk has always been very popular with park goers and those passing by.
Pudsey Park and the kiosk were originally opened to the public in April 1928 by the Duke and Duchess of York, later to become King George VI and Queen Elizabeth.